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Felted Wool Baby Jacket

As soon as the leaves began to change color, I started getting my daughter all gussied up in fall finery. She had quite a collection of wool pants, knee high socks, and even a whole drawer full of hand knit sweaters. What she didn’t have, however, was a jacket! When I set about making one, I knew Purl Soho had the perfect fabric, Dorr Mill Wool Yardage!

This wool has a lovely drape and a soft hand, plus it’s nice and warm. I wanted the lining to be just as special, and so I went right to Liberty of London’s Tana Lawn Seasonals. The Darcie print in green is so subtle and pretty with that signature silky Liberty feel.

Since I’m not an expert garment seamstress, I kept the shape of the jacket simple and chic, no collar or fussy sleeve seams allowed! In the end this little kimono style jacket is a perfect addition to Guadalupe’s fall wardrobe, warm, cute, and easy to get on and off with just one big sew-on snap. As far as I can tell, Lupe likes it a lot too… at least, she likes chewing on it!

Pattern

Cutting

One back piece. Cut this piece by folding the fabric and placing the template edge along the fold. Cut around the template. Your cut piece will have two sleeves.

Two front pieces.

From the lining (the Tana Lawn) :

One back piece, cut in the same manner as for the wool back piece.

Two front pieces. Cut one with the right side of the fabric facing up and one with the wrong side facing up so that the two cut pieces will face in opposite directions.

Sewing the Outside and Lining

Pin the front pieces to the back piece of the wool along the top of the sleeves, the bottom of the sleeves, and the sides.

Sew the pieces together along the pinned sides with a 1/2-inch seam allowance.

Pin the front pieces to the back piece of the lining along the top of the sleeves, the bottom of the sleeves, and the sides.

Make a mark 1 1/2-inches from the outer edges of the sleeves at both the top and bottom pinned sides of the sleeves.

Sew the pieces together along the pinned sides with a 1/2-inch seam allowance. when you get to the markings change the seam allowance to be 1/4-inch as illustrated above.

Cut notches three out of the seam allowance of the underarm curve.

Turn the lining right sides out and press it flat.

Attaching the Outside and Lining

Slide the lining inside the outer section, right sides together. Pin the lining to the wool all along the front openings, bottom, and neck.

Make sure to line up the shoulder seams of both the lining and wool sections. You might have to tear out a few stitches along both sides of the lining seams to get it to fit perfectly. Don’t worry about this- you’re about to sew over this section again so it will be fine in the end.

Make sure the sleeve sections of the lining are tucked into the sleeves of the outer jacket so you won’t sew over them.

Starting at in the middle of the bottom back sew all around this pinned area with a 1/2-inch seam allowance leaving a 3-inch gap between the beginning and end of the seam.

Cut notches into the underarm curves of the wool and trim all the corners of the seam allowance.

Turn the piece right sides out through the unsewn gap.

The lining section of the sleeves will still not be sewn to the wool. Pull them out of the wool sleeves.

Sewing the Sleeves

Cut 1 1/2-inches off of each of the sleeves from the wool section only.

Pull the sleeve sections of the lining through the wool sections as shown above.

Fold the lining down once so that its raw edge meets the raw edge of the wool.

Then fold the lining over once again to hide the raw edges. Pin the lining in place making sure the top and bottom seams of the lining and wool are lined up with one another.

Pin both of the sleeves in this manner and then pin the 3-inch gap at the back of the jacket closed.

Stitch the lining to the wool using a slip stitch along the edge of the lining fold at the sleeves.

Stitch the gap closed in the same manner.

Finishing Up

At the back of the neck, between the shoulder seams, pin the outside to the lining. Edge stitch the two sides together along this section.

Close the jacket and mark where you would like to place your snap, at the top of the overlap.

When you say “baby”… that could be newborn or a year and a half! Looking at the proportions, I'm guessing that it's for a child whose limbs have not yet done the ~6-9 month growth spurt, but it'd be nice to know. I have little enough time with my wee one to make something that fits — I can't imagine gambling with sizes.

I certainly understand your concern about sizing as I have a 4 month old baby who is growing like a weed! This pattern is a 0-6 month size as stated at the beginning of the pattern, under the materials section.

There is no piping at the back of the neck, just a row of topstitching to sew the lining and wool together at the back neck edge. This step is explained in the “finishing up” section of the pattern above.

Please let us know if you have any more questions and thank you for writing in!

Love this pattern! Do you think it would be relatively straightforward to size it up to even like a 2T or 4T size? I think the style would look adorable on my 20 month or 3 year old, both of whom wear about a size bigger than their age.

Rather than sizing up these pattern pieces I think it would be easiest to make your own, since kids have different proportions than babies. You can trace the basic shape from something that fits your kids onto a piece of newspaper. This would be the back piece. Then cut the front pattern piece to match the arm length and underarm curve of the back piece. Once you get your pattern pieces set it will be put together in the same way and you can follow this pattern as written.

You might want to print the pattern pieces for the baby size out to get a sense of how they fit together. Also I'd sew one in scrap fabric or muslin before cutting into the wool.

Please let us know if you have any more questions or need help along the way!

Thank you so much for posting this! I'm past due with my first child, and I've been having the hardest time finding little baby-sized jackets! Okay, so she's not likely to be that little, but I feel like the options in stores, at least the affordable ones, are so limited in terms of jackets/outerwear until they're bigger… and I don't want to stuff her into a bunting all the time. This is really fantastic – a great nesting project!

I made this today with corduroy in place of the wool, and it came out just adorable. The shoulder seam thing is a little tricky, especially with such large seam allowances, but it turne out fine. Thank you!!!

My mom and I made these for my 6-week old and her soon to be cousin. We recycled a couple of grandpa's wool sweaters for the exteriors and lined with calico prints. We machine washed and dried the sweaters to felt them first. This worked well, but made for a bulkier weight fabric. We made sure to trim the seam allowances before turning out.

I had a little trouble with the shoulder seams and the overall neckline–mine came out really wide–so I triaged with an inverted box pleat in the back. We also top stitched around the outer edges, which helped our bulkier felt keep its edge.

The jackets came out cute and baby girl is already wearing hers. Warm and stylish…

I believe Jaquine's comment about the pipping at the neckline is the twig hanger that is more visible in the second photo. I also thought that it was pipping and since I had just been at the sew for baby site reading about projects that used bias tape I thought wow these folks really do like using bias tape since they've found an easy (and cheap) way to make it!I am going to meet my first grandchild in April and have been looking at sites to see what Moms were making for their babies. Your comment about the different proportions between a baby and a toddler was something I had not thought of before and will keep it mind as I crank up the sewing machine again. Your instructions were very clear, Good Job! A tip about getting both sides of the snap to meet up correctly is to sew on the nipple half first. Align the two front halves, and carefully so the fronts don't shift, lift the corner and rub chalk on the nipple, then put the fabric back down and rub the chalk onto the other side of the jacket front.Agape, Susie Q ><>

I love this pattern and am planning to make it up for a friend who's just had twins. But sometimes I have a problem with my printer settings (sometimes 100% is not the right size) so could you tell me one measurement so that I can check I've got it right? The cuff width maybe?

Hi Molly, These are fantastic instructions for such a beautiful simple jacket. I love the Japanese-style simplicity and design of this little jacket, and will definitely have a go at sewing this for my daughter. Thank you for sharing these designs and instructions!Best wishes, Chrissie

Thank you for posting this super pattern. What a lovely jacket. The instructions were very clear, I normally struggle & didn't with this project. I enlarged the pattern to fit my 8 month old. My dodgy calculations, however, have meant it is one to grow into!

Hi. I have printed out this darling jacket. It appears to me with a 1/2″ seam allowance, my pattern is long for a baby jacket. The length from neck down is almost 12″. Is this right? I appreciate your help. Thanks.

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